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Celebrating their 25th anniversary in style, 311 dig into their vaults for the box set
Archive -- four discs of B-sides, non-LP tracks, demos, and unreleased songs. It goes without saying that this is one for the fans -- specifically ...

David Draiman pulls out all the stops with the self-titled debut of his industrial metal
band, Device, his first project since Disturbed went on hiatus in 2011. Teaming up with Geno Lenardo, formerly of Filter, Device's debut finds them looking ...

It's almost a blessing that, for legal reasons, this four-piece can't call itself Black Sabbath.
It only serves to hammer home the point that with Ronnie James Dio up front and Vinny Appice in back, Tony Iommi and Geezer Butler ...

Black Sabbath's first attempt at an official live album, 1982's Live Evil was also the
straw that broke the camel's back -- or rather, split the legendary group's second lineup right down the middle. Band tensions were already at an ...

During Helloween's up-and-down recording career, fans learned to expect the unexpected. The band's songwriting and
musical/thematic commitment could not always be relied upon, and the depths to which Helloween could sink were never more obvious than during the mid-'90s. During ...

Through summoning demons from the depths of hell as the frontman of metal pioneers Black
Sabbath in their best days, partying hard through the '80s and landing on a reality show focusing on his dysfunctional family in the 2000s, Ozzy ...

1981's Mob Rules was the second Black Sabbath album to feature vertically challenged singer Ronnie
James Dio, whose powerful pipes and Dungeons and Dragons lyrics initially seemed like the perfect replacement for the recently departed and wildly popular Ozzy Osbourne. ...

After quitting briefly following the band's previous tour, singer Ozzy Osbourne returned to Black Sabbath
for 1978's Never Say Die! The title track kicks things off with a promising bang but ultimately lacks enthusiasm; a pleasant surprise arrives in the ...